Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 18South Africa
De Luca and Others v Brazilie Farms (Pty) Ltd and Others (2023-130579) [2024] ZAGPJHC 18 (4 January 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
4 January 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## De Luca and Others v Brazilie Farms (Pty) Ltd and Others (2023-130579) [2024] ZAGPJHC 18 (4 January 2024)
De Luca and Others v Brazilie Farms (Pty) Ltd and Others (2023-130579) [2024] ZAGPJHC 18 (4 January 2024)
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sino date 4 January 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2023-130579
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED:
YES
/NO
SIGNATURE
DATE:
04/01/2024
In
the matter between:
LOUISE
ANN DE LUCA
FIRST APPLICANT
PETER
JOHN DE LUCA
SECOND APPLICANT
LINDA
MARGARET DE LUCA
THIRD APPLICANT
and
BRAZILIE
FARMS (PTY) LTD
FIRST RESPONDENT
PAUL
ALDO DE LUCA N.O.
SECOND RESPONDENT
ANDREW
ALDO DE LUCA N.O.
THIRD RESPONDENT
LINDA
MARGARET DE LUCA N.O.
FOURTH RESPONDENT
PAUL
ALDO DE LUCA
FIFTH RESPONDENT
ANDREW
ALDO DE LUCA
SIXTH RESPONDENT
MONDZO
CAMPS & CONSERVATION (PTY) LTD
SEVENTH RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
MANOIM
J:
“
All
happy families are alike: each unhappy family is unhappy in its own
way”
Leo Tolstoy, “Anna Karenina”
[1]
This application concerns an unhappy family. They are all descendants
of the late
Aldo de Luca who in the 1960’s bought a game farm
known as the Brazilie Farm that is adjacent to the Kruger National
Park.
In 2005, as part of his estate planning, he transferred the
shares in the farm, which was then owned by the first respondent
(“the
company”), to a family trust he had set up. The
Trust now owns 100% of the company, which in turn owns 100% of the
farm.
[2]
The three applicants are all children of the late Aldo and are all
beneficiaries of
the trust. Given that de Luca is the common surname
of most of the litigants in this matter, I will from now on refer to
them by
their first names. The first two applicants, Louise, and
Peter are siblings and beneficiaries of the Trust. The third
applicant
is their sister Linda, who is also a beneficiary of the
Trust but unlike them also a trustee of the Trust. Hence, she has
also
been cited in this capacity as the fourth respondent.
[1]
The second respondent, Paul, is another sibling of the applicants,
from whom they have become estranged. He is both a beneficiary
and
trustee of the Trust. The third respondent is Paul’s son
Andrew, who is also a trustee of the Trust and is a presently
the
only member of the family who lives on the farm and apparently runs
it. Paul and Andrew are cited in both their personal capacities
and
those as trustees.
[3]
In addition to being trustees Paul and Andrew are the sole directors
of the first
respondent which is the company that owns the farm.
[4]
The division of the family between applicants and respondents relates
to an ongoing
feud control over the Trust that has found its way into
the courts on several occasions. There is even a dispute over whether
some
of this litigation has been settled. But it is common cause that
at least one case is still pending which relates to the validity
of
Andrew’s appointment and the right of Peter to be appointed or
to nominate a descendant as a trustee. This case has now
been set
down for trial and is due to commence in the Gauteng High Court in
August 2024. (“the August trial”). It is
of indirect to
the current matter because if the applicants prevail in the August
trial, they or their nominees may constitute
a majority of the
trustees of the Trust.
[5]
What has triggered this application is a decision by Andrew and Paul,
in their capacity
as directors of the company, to enter into a
fifteen-year notarial lease agreement with the seventh respondent,
Mondzo Camps &
Conservation (Pty) Ltd, to establish a camp on the
farm with certain rights of access for their visitors. The lease was
negotiated
in March 2023 and the lease was notarised on 8 May 2023.
The applicants did not know about this lease at the time.
[6]
It came to their attention indirectly. As a result of one of the
previous court applications
the Master had appointed an attorney,
Charl Du Plessis, in October 2023, to investigate the Trust. During
his investigation, Du
Plessis asked the applicants if they were aware
of the lease agreement. The applicants claim they had no knowledge of
it until
then. This triggered the present application.
[7]
The relief sought is that:
“
That the first,
fifth and sixth respondents are interdicted from allowing the seventh
respondent occupation of Portion 1 of Farm
Brazilie No 48
Bushbuckridge pending the outcome of the trial under case number
2015/42031 [“the August trial”].
[8]
The lease was initially meant to commence on 1 January 2024. Hence
the original urgency
of this application. The applicants argue that
once the lease commences it will be difficult to subsequently evict
Mondzo and there
is likely to be considerable damage to the property
due to the erection of the contemplated camp. Hence the need to have
the interim
relief decided before the lease commences. Subsequently,
Paul and Andrew then reached an agreement with Mondzo to postpone the
commencement date to March 2024. Hence Paul and Andrew (from now on
the “opposing respondents”) contend the application
is no
longer urgent and should be struck on that basis.
[9]
However, I am sympathetic to the applicants’ argument that even
if commencement
date is only 1 March 2024, it is unlikely this matter
would be heard on the ordinary opposed roll before then, and so the
applicants
would not succeed in obtaining substantial relief in due
course as the lease would have commenced.
[2]
[10]
The opposing respondents also take a point on jurisdiction. They
argue that none of the respondents,
nor the farm, are within the
jurisdiction of this court and hence it does not have effective
jurisdiction. However, I consider
this court does on the basis that
the interim interdict sought in this matter is pending the August
case, a case to be heard in
this court’s jurisdiction. This
court thus has effective jurisdiction in relation to the nature of
the relief sought.
[11]
I will also assume for the benefit of the applicants’ that I
can pierce the corporate veil,
to conclude that as directors who are
also trustees of the Trust, the directors’ decisions must be
made in the best interests
of the beneficiaries.
[3]
[12]
But even if the applicants can overcome these hurdles the question is
whether they have made
out a case for an interim interdict. The
opposing respondents contend that they have not, and they fail at the
first requirement
of establishing a
prima facie
right.
[13]
This is how the applicants have framed this issue in the founding
affidavit.
“
The applicants
have a prima facie right to the use and enjoyment of the
whole
farm free from commercial activity and free from
occupation by a third party whose lease prohibits the applicants from
entering
that part of the farm that the seventh respondent is using.”
(“Emphasis provided”).
[14]
Since this right derives from their status as beneficiaries of the
Trust it is important to consider
what the Trust deed says. In the
Trust deed, the main purpose is described as follows:
“
The main
Purpose of the Trust is the acquisition of the farm BRAZILIE and any
additional land for the purposes of nature conservation
and for the
utilization thereof by the descendants of Aldo Govanni De Luca and
their extended families.”
[15]
From this statement it is clear that the Trust has two objectives in
respect of the farm: (i)
the purpose of nature conservation and (ii)
the utilisation for the benefit of the descendants of Aldo.
[16]
The applicants are all descendants of Aldo – this is common
cause. They have for sometime,
been denied access to the farm,
although this is disputed. The tension between them and the opposing
respondents is that the latter
are concerned with the upkeep of the
farm which has ongoing expenses. Because the farm is a game farm and
has an open fence arrangement
with the Kruger National Park, it is
obliged to perform certain nature conservation obligations. These
obligations are ongoing
and expensive. The opposing respondents
contend that the applicants have failed to contribute to these
expenses and hence denying
them access is justified until they do so.
But that is not part of this dispute. The real question is whether
the lease agreement
was in violation of the beneficiaries’
rights to use and enjoyment of the whole of the farm. What the
opposing respondents
contend is that the lease with Mondzo was
necessary to pay for the upkeep of the farm given that it had to meet
these expenses.
Moreover, on their version the lease will only result
in minimal use of the farm property.
[17]
They state the following:
“
The camp's area
is approximately 0.46% of the farm's space. Relatively speaking its
footprint will be minimal. From a conservation
perspective this is
ideal;”
[18]
And they also state that this usage will be minimal:
“
The camp is
almost entirely movable and portable. It will be largely made up of
fully portable tents that have a limited impact
on the surrounding
bushveld. We have been advised that even the pool area will be
movable;”
[19]
Thus, applying
Plascon-Evans
I must accept this version. The
opposing respondents have established that the lease will be
minimally invasive of the applicants’
right to the use and
enjoyment of the farm. If the proposed camp’s physical
structure can easily be dismantled and constitutes
such a minimal
proportion of the property (less than 1%) it is hard to see how the
applicants’ rights are violated, unless,
as they contend, they
have a right which extends over the
whole
of the property. But
there is nothing in the Trust deed that suggests that this right of
enjoyment, to this extent, exists at all,
let alone to the exclusion
of any other right which trustees may exercise to enter into
commercial arrangements to provide for
the upkeep of the property
which indirectly contributes to the farm’s contribution to
nature conservation. The lease to a
conservation company for tourism
is not inconsistent with the objectives of the Trust deed. Moreover,
the trustees are given explicit
powers to enter into leases, so the
mere conclusion of a lease with a conservation company is not
inconsistent with their powers
or with the objects of the Trust.
[20]
The applicants may well be unhappy with the manner in which Paul and
Andrew are running the Trust
without ever consulting them, but that
is not the subject matter of the present application. The notarial
lease is. The applicants
have not established that their right to use
and enjoyment of the farm extends to the whole farm. Hence, they have
not established
a prima facie right on the present papers and their
application fails.
[21]
The opposing respondents are entitled to their costs. They sought
attorney client costs and the
costs of two counsel. However, I do not
consider they are entitled to any more than party and party costs and
the costs of one
counsel. Their conduct in the running the Trust
without consultation with the beneficiaries and in a manner that is
not transparent,
whilst I cannot say with any certainty may have
obviated this litigation, has at least partially contributed to its
length and
urgency.
ORDER:-
[22]
In the result the following order is made:
1.
The application is dismissed.
2.
The second and third respondents are entitled to their costs on a
party and party
basis, confined to the costs of one counsel.
N.
MANOIM
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION
JOHNANNESBURG
Date
of hearing:
20
December 2023
Date
of Judgment:
04 January 2024
Appearances:
Counsel for the
Applicant:
R Stevenson
Instructed by.
Boon
Schreiber-Maritz Attorneys
S. Aucamp and
Counsel for the
Respondent:
CJ Smith
Instructed by:
Paterson Attorneys
[1]
The founding affidavit refers to her as the fourth applicant, but
this is an obvious error.
[2]
See
East
Rock Trading 7 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Eagle Valley Granite (Pty)
Ltd and Others
(11/33767) [2011] ZAGPJHC 196 (23 September 2011 paragraph 9.
[3]
See
De
Kock v Griessel NO and Others
(50776/16)
[2017] ZAGPPHC 1163 (23 October 2017)) paragraphs 24-26.
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